Cheyenne Mountain

Cheyenne Mountain

This view of Cheyenne Mountain accompanied the poem On Cheyenne Mountain at Twilight in the 1891 volume Pictures and Poems of the Pike’s Peak Region published by Ernest Whitney. The work was illustrated with photographs by Sanford—printed by the New York Photo-Gravure Co.—with poems by Whitney.

On Cheyenne Mountain at Twilight.

  • The pale light lingering along the land.
  • The low land sinking through the waning light,
  • Fill me with sobered thought. So comes the night
  • Of death, when lifted high o’er earth we stand,
  • And all fades out beneath us, while more grand
  • Heaven opens wide above. New glory bright
  • Comes in the nearer stars, that fill the sight
  • Down to the darkness by earth’s shadow spanned.
  • And the sweet peace that man so rarely gains.
  • Though nature ever offers it to all.
  • Comes balmy. soothing life’s tumultuous pains.
  • Lo! the old truth enforced, though blind and bound
  • I move nor see beyond life’s carnal wall,
  • Yet heaven is here as in the vast profound.

William Henry Sanford: 1854-1914

An amateur, W.H. Sanford was born in Brooklyn and eventually settled in Litchfield County CT. Anthony’s Photographic Bulletin for their issue of Dec. 12, 1885 reported he was an early member of The Society of Amateur Photographers of New York. He participated in its first annual exhibition:

“Mr. W. H. Sanford showed a number of landscapes made upon 6½ x 8½ plates that were well done. We cannot find any fault with this exhibit, as the work was very good in the photographic parts, and the subjects were pleasing.”

Sanford’s work was published in at least one magazine in the first decade of the 20th Century. His photographs accompanied the article “What the Apple will do in Connecticut” in the May, 1912 issue of Country Life in America.

In 1925 his photograph Willows on Bantam River, Litchfield Wild Garden appeared as the frontispiece to the October, 1925 issue of Landscape Architecture.

Sun & Shade: An Artistic Periodical

Within the covers of Sun and Shade…We shall especially endeavor to encourage the artistic side of direct photography in all its phases,”—Ernest Edwards, president & publisher, 1889

In July, 1888, the first issue of Sun & Shade: A Photographic Record of Events, was published in New York City by The Photo-Gravure Company. Essentially a high-class art periodical, each issue featured eight or more beautiful hand-pulled photogravures as well as plates printed in photogelatine, (collotype) and halftone. These were collected within a stapled, folio-sized magazine issued monthly.  The subject matter included the work of leading amateur and professional photographers, as well as works of art—many from the galleries at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan. The December issue—Christmas themed—featured a specially designed cover printed in green ink.  Success was swift. The first issue sold 1000 copies “in a fortnight”. (1.) Within the first year, Sun & Shade quickly increased circulation to 4000 copies a month. With a public demand for reprinting earlier issues, this success lead to a rebranding, after which, beginning with the September, 1889 issue, the magazine was renamed Sun & Shade: An Artistic Periodical. The final issue was March, 1896, when financial issues to the parent company, spurred by the eventual May, 1896 bankruptcy of the N.Y. Photo-Gravure Company, forced its closure.

Sun & Shade would become the ultimate statement of the many skills and inquisitive mind of Englishman Ernest Edwards. (1836-1903) Essentially his own printed passion project, the magazine was fueled by his ongoing love of photography in the field (issues featured many plates by him over the years) and a deeply scientific mind which pushed the advancement of the state of photo-mechanical reproduction and fine printing.

The son of a clergyman from Bloomsbury in London, he initially made a name for himself taking photographic portraits of eminent people in his Baker Street gallery. (Charles Darwin sat for him several times) His love of the outdoors also bore fruit and he became an accomplished alpine photographer. But his real interest centered around photo-mechanical reproduction. In 1869, he took out a patent in England for his own rudimentary collotype process called heliotype. In the Fall of 1872, he moved across the pond along with his wife Charlotte, and became superintendent of Boston’s Heliotype Printing Company after selling the American rights to American publisher James Ripley Osgood. (1836–1892) Edwards ran the Heliotype Printing Co. there until the end of 1884. The following year the James R. Osgood & Co. went bankrupt, although not a result of the heliotype division.

Growing restless in Boston, he then moved to New York City, where he established a new firm in March, 1885: The Photo-Gravure Company, (subsequently renamed The New York Photo-Gravure Company) with offices in Manhattan and a leased printing factory in Brooklyn. In 1887, his company received perhaps the one commission it’s best known for today: the printing of  781 collotypes, which Edwards called photogelatine plates, making up the monumental publication:

Animal Locomotion. An Electro-Photographic Investigation of Consecutive Phases of Animal Movements, 1872-1885, with the landmark sequenced motion study photographs taken by British photographer Eadweard Muybridge

Restructured in 1891 as the New York Photogravure Co., Ernest Edwards continued to advance the state of photo-mechanical printing during his final decade, with Sun & Shade publishing some of the earliest examples of his own invention by 1894: plates printed in a three-color process called chrome-gelatine, a variation of his heliotype process.

Quality Rather than Quantity

Even though it survived less than eight years in print, describing Sun & Shade in Ernest Edward’s own words is perhaps the best posterity for this important photographic periodical with an artistic heart. One year after its’ debut, he wrote the following, published in The Photographic Times for August 2, 1889:

A year ago we commenced the publication of our novel venture in journalism Sun and Shade, a Picture Periodical without letterpress, almost as an experiment, with a modest list of less than fifty subscribers. To-day we are printing an edition of 4,000 copies monthly. A sufficiently convincing proof of the wisdom of our hope that there was room for us.

“In our rapid growth the wish has been indicated unmistakably for the higher grade of pictures, and of the higher class–always for quality rather than quantity. Following rather than leading such a wish, we feel that we make no mistake in marking the future career of the magazine to be rather that of an artistic periodical than a photographic record of events.

*Our efforts shall be directed in the future to make Sun and Shade an artistic periodical which shall be not only pleasing but educational in its broadest sense, Some of our plans may be briefly referred to.

“We shall reproduce the leading pictures in the great collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Within the covers of Sun and Shade will be found from time to time, reproductions of the works of American artists. We shall especially endeavor to encourage the artistic side of direct photography in all its phases, And we shall supplement these special features with examples of sculpture, architecture, and industrial art. If in the future we receive as hearty a response to our efforts as we have received in the past, our task will be indeed pleasant and our road to success a royal one.” (p. 394)

  1. Notice: Sun & Shade: October, 1888. The August and September issues did not appear.
Title
Cheyenne Mountain
Photographer
Journal
Country
Medium
Atelier
Year
Dimensions

Image Dimensions19.9 x 14.3 cm February, 1891 No. 30

Support Dimensions34.8 x 27.5 cm

Print Notes

Recto: Fourth plate in pagination; described on separate contents page:

IV.  CHEYENNE MOUNTAINS. (Photogravure.)

From negative by W. H. Sanford.

Reprinted by permission from “Pictures and Poems of the Pike’s Peak Region,” published by Ernest Whitney.